KubeSphere Service Mesh
On the basis of Istio, KubeSphere Service Mesh visualizes microservices governance and traffic management. It features a powerful toolkit including circuit breaking, blue-green deployment, canary release, traffic mirroring, tracing, observability, and traffic control. Developers can easily get started with KubeSphere Service Mesh without any code hacking, with the learning curve of Istio greatly reduced. All features of KubeSphere Service Mesh are designed to meet users’ demand for their business.
For more information, see Grayscale Release.
Enable KubeSphere Service Mesh Before Installation
Installing on Linux
When you implement multi-node installation of KubeSphere on Linux, you need to create a configuration file, which lists all KubeSphere components.
In the tutorial of Installing KubeSphere on Linux, you create a default file
config-sample.yaml
. Modify the file by executing the following command:vi config-sample.yaml
Note
If you adopt All-in-One Installation, you do not need to create a
config-sample.yaml
file as you can create a cluster directly. Generally, the all-in-one mode is for users who are new to KubeSphere and look to get familiar with the system. If you want to enable KubeSphere Service Mesh in this mode (for example, for testing purposes), refer to the following section to see how KubeSphere Service Mesh can be installed after installation.In this file, navigate to
servicemesh
and changefalse
totrue
forenabled
. Save the file after you finish.servicemesh:
enabled: true # Change "false" to "true".
Create a cluster using the configuration file:
./kk create cluster -f config-sample.yaml
Installing on Kubernetes
As you install KubeSphere on Kubernetes, you can enable KubeSphere Service Mesh first in the cluster-configuration.yaml file.
Download the file cluster-configuration.yaml and edit it.
vi cluster-configuration.yaml
In this local
cluster-configuration.yaml
file, navigate toservicemesh
and enable it by changingfalse
totrue
forenabled
. Save the file after you finish.servicemesh:
enabled: true # Change "false" to "true".
Execute the following commands to start installation:
kubectl apply -f https://github.com/kubesphere/ks-installer/releases/download/v3.2.0/kubesphere-installer.yaml
kubectl apply -f cluster-configuration.yaml
Enable KubeSphere Service Mesh After Installation
Log in to the console as
admin
. Click Platform in the upper-left corner and select Cluster Management.Click CRDs and enter
clusterconfiguration
in the search bar. Click the result to view its detail page.Info
A Custom Resource Definition (CRD) allows users to create a new type of resources without adding another API server. They can use these resources like any other native Kubernetes objects.
In Custom Resources, click on the right of
ks-installer
and select Edit YAML.In this YAML file, navigate to
servicemesh
and changefalse
totrue
forenabled
. After you finish, click OK in the lower-right corner to save the configuration.servicemesh:
enabled: true # Change "false" to "true".
You can use the web kubectl to check the installation process by executing the following command:
kubectl logs -n kubesphere-system $(kubectl get pod -n kubesphere-system -l app=ks-install -o jsonpath='{.items[0].metadata.name}') -f
Note
You can find the web kubectl tool by clicking in the lower-right corner of the console.
Verify the Installation of the Component
Go to System Components and check that all components on the Istio tab page is in Healthy state.
Execute the following command to check the status of Pods:
kubectl get pod -n istio-system
The output may look as follows if the component runs successfully:
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
istio-ingressgateway-78dbc5fbfd-f4cwt 1/1 Running 0 9m5s
istiod-1-6-10-7db56f875b-mbj5p 1/1 Running 0 10m
jaeger-collector-76bf54b467-k8blr 1/1 Running 0 6m48s
jaeger-operator-7559f9d455-89hqm 1/1 Running 0 7m
jaeger-query-b478c5655-4lzrn 2/2 Running 0 6m48s
kiali-f9f7d6f9f-gfsfl 1/1 Running 0 4m1s
kiali-operator-7d5dc9d766-qpkb6 1/1 Running 0 6m53s